A blog which supplements my two books, Menasha, and Neenah and Menasha: Twin Cities of the Fox Valley
Pages
Downtown 1958
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Kemmeters
John Kemmeter and Anne Nussbaum Kemmeter, owners of a grocery store at 318 Ahnaip Street (1900 Menasha City Directory). In later years, their son, Peter, ran a similar grocery at 303 Ahnaip (1924 Street Guide).
photo courtesy, Menasha Public Library
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Mill and Main Streets
photo courtesy Menasha Public Library
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
316 Racine Street
Monday, July 21, 2014
Friday, July 18, 2014
Fire Coverage
The Oshkosh Northwestern of July 18, 1964 provided the above press coverage of the fire. Days later, estimates of damage were revised downward to $1 million by the Menasha fire chief.
Thursday, July 17, 2014
Fifty Years Ago Today...The Wooden Ware Fire
The Menasha Wooden Ware fire of July 17,1964 brought an era to a close. A railroad employee, using an acetylene torch to repair a track on a wooden trestle next to the box plant, set fire to the trestle. Although the fire was quickly controlled, burning embers were still carried by a swift breeze and engulfed the building, destroying it and three boxcars. Two weeks after the fire, the company’s board of directors announced that a new 185,000 square foot corrugated box plant would be constructed in an industrial park three miles south of Neenah. New corporate offices, to be adjacent to the new plant, were planned as well and the office staff left Menasha the next year.
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
309 DePere Street
Still serving the industrial, institutional, health care, food service, manufacturing, professional, municipality and school markets, United Paper is a wholesale distributor and has been locally owned and operated since 1921 in Menasha. The photo above is their old location; I grew up in the shadow of this building, which is just north of the old Coonen's gas station at Third and DePere Streets and just before the railroad tracks.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Twenty-Five Year Club
My father went on to register 41 years at the company before he retired and I know they had a dinner for him then when he left, but that was for his career. With the way people are employed nowadays and go from job to job, do companies even do such things anymore...that is, have banquets for longevity?
Monday, July 14, 2014
Creamery Journal
Creamery Journal, June 15, 1922
Testimonial letter testifying to the greatness of the Menasha Wooden Ware product!
Friday, July 11, 2014
Having a Taste
Patrons sample the wares from the Walter Bros. Brewing truck, presumably Gold Label beer. And it looks to be a generous sample.
courtesy Neenah History site at Flickr web site and Creative Commons License
courtesy Neenah History site at Flickr web site and Creative Commons License
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Elisha D. Smith
July 8, 1899 Oshkosh Northwestern
Elisha D. Smith needs no introduction to readers of this blog- namesake to the library, donator of Smith Park, founder and head of the Menasha Woodenware, and generally just all around biggest supporter for Menasha. A personality that big surely deserved the tribute given him in this newspaper, complete with a likeness at a time when newspaper photography was virtually nonexistent and iillustrations were few. No history of the city would be complete without his accomplishments in evidence. The gratitude of Menasha's citizenry was evident; many businesses closed up shop to allow their employees to attend his services and his funeral procession was reportedly more than a mile long.
(Such a sense of timing I have...I'd had this item just waiting to post on the 115th anniversary date of his death and then I forgot somehow.)
(Such a sense of timing I have...I'd had this item just waiting to post on the 115th anniversary date of his death and then I forgot somehow.)
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Here Comes Railroad Week
June 30, 1936 Oshkosh Northwestern
July 1, 1936 Oshkosh Northwestern
July 13, 1936 Oshkosh Northwestern
Beginning in the early 1930s, the railroads began to reinvent themselves with a program of modernizing passenger trains using railroad cars of lighter materials like aluminum or stainless steel. The streamlined train came to represent the newest and finest in rail travel as the railroads sought to reinvent themselves as they competed with the public's newfound fascination with automobiles. In time, when the 1950s rolled around, the influx of faster and safer airline service and the introduction of the interstate highway system proved to be even more worthy adversaries to the nation's railroads as a dependable means of transportation.
Tuesday, July 8, 2014
Behind the Old Fire Station
Not so historical looking from the back end but still a proud old structure, this 1988 photo shows the rear of the old fire house/city hall before it was demolished. To the left is the former Twin City Savings drive through and to the right is the-then seniors center.
Friday, July 4, 2014
Happy Independence Day!
I'm taking a few days away from the blog. I'll be back on Tuesday, July 8th. Until then, have a safe and enjoyable (and extended) weekend!
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Schultz Drug Store
An interior view from 1923 of Schultz's Drug Store at 180 Main Street. The clerk on the left is Walter Adrian, and the man on the right is pharmacist Helmer Haugh. The store occupied the storefront at Main and Milwaukee for many years until the 1940s.
Photograph courtesy of the Menasha Public Library
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I'm taking a few days away from the blog. I'll be back on Tuesday, July 8th. Happy Independence Day!
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
John Strange's Birthday Party
Lest we forget, John Strange, despite his business successes in Menasha, was also elected as the 21st Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin in 1908, and served one term, from 1909 until 1911.
After his term ended, he continued his career in business. When he died in 1923, he was president of the John Strange Paper Company, the John Strange Pail Company and the Stevens Point Pulp and Paper Company, as well as the director of R. McMillian Company.
The Honorable S. A. Cook, mentioned here as toastmaster, was, of course, the namesake for the familiar armory that graced the border of the two towns for many years on Washington/Commercial Streets.
The Honorable S. A. Cook, mentioned here as toastmaster, was, of course, the namesake for the familiar armory that graced the border of the two towns for many years on Washington/Commercial Streets.
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Fritse Park Quarry
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)